Transcript Document

Mr. Kevin Sexton©
PS 103 – United State Political Systems
Southeast Missouri State University
 The US Constitution states that the President shall be the person
that receives a majority of the votes cast in the Electoral College.
 The US Constitution does not state who the members of the
Electoral College get to choose from.
 In short, the US Constitution does not explain how each party in the
United States will select the person that will represent its party in
the OFFICIAL PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION process.

This is because the US Constitution does not address the idea of
POLITICAL PARTIES.
How Many People Ran For President in 2008?
The above candidates are only those candidates that were on the presidential ballot in more than one
state. There are many candidates that only make it on a single states presidential ballot.
The above data was retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008_Presidential_Candidates on 12/10/2010.
We will look closely at the process used by the Democratic and Republican parties.
BUT RIGHT NOW, we must realize that not all parties follow the same process as the
Democratic and Republican Parties here we will look at the OBJECTIONIST PARTY’S nomination
process. It is bit of an extreme example, but it does highlight the fact that each party can
create its own process, and the person nominated by that process is recognized as that party’s
legitimate nominee.
The following text came straight from the OBJECTIONIST PARTY’S website:
The text to the left was
retrieved From
http://objectivistparty.us/
on 12/10/2010.
The Presidential Nomination Process Used By
The Republican and Democratic Parties.
With a few differences, which we will highlight, the Republican and Democratic parties use
a very similar method in nominating its presidential candidates.
In short, the fight for the Democratic or Republican Presidential Nomination is a fight
for their party’s:
To their party’s NATIONAL NOMINATING CONVENTION.
A DELEGATE is a person that has been selected to represent a group they belong to at a
meeting or convention.
200 AKA Members at SEMO
60,000 AKA members in the Country
300 AKA Chapters in the Country
60,000 people at the AKA National Convention?
NO!
2 Members From Each Chapter are Selected as Delegated From Their Chapter
600 DELEGATES at the National Convention?
This tells us how many people will attend the national
Convention of each party every four years. But does
not tell us where (what state) they will come from.
47 million registered Republicans1
63 Million registered Democrats1
In 2008 they selected 2380 of those 47 million
to act as delegates, that would OFFICIALLY select
or nominate the person that would run for
president for the Republican Party.
5000
4000
3000
2000
1000
0
4337 4322 4418
2066 2509 2380
In 2008 they selected 4418 of those 63 million
to act as delegates, that would OFFICIALLY select
or nominate the person that would run for
president for the Democratic Party.
Delegates to the
Democratic
National
Convention
Delegates to the
Republican
National
Convention
1http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/columnists/n
euharth/neu057.htm retrieved on 12/16/2010
Each party decides how many delegates come from each state. The primary factor affecting
how many delegates a state will get is population. But as the below slides will show you the
number of delegates from a state will change from election to election, and the parties will
change which states they emphasis from election to election.
Alaska's Delegates to
Presidential Nominating
Conventions
30
20
23
19
29
18
29
18
10
0
2000 2004 2008
Election Election Election
Alaska's Delegates
to the Democratic
National
Convention
Notice How The Number Of Delegates Assigned
To A State Can Change From Election To Election.
Missouri's Delegates to
Presidential Nominating
Conventions
Alaska's Delegates
to the Republican
National
Convention
Also Notice How The Parties Put More Emphasis
On One State Over Another. This Can Be Seen
When You Notice That The Proportion Of
Democratic Delegates To Republican Delegates Are
Not Always Equal From One State To Another.
100
80
60
40
20
0
92
88
57
35
88
58
Missouri's
Delegates to the
Democratic
National
Convention
Missouri's
Delegates to the
Republican
National
Convention
This Map Shows How Many Delegates Each State or Area Was Given To
The 2008 Democratic and Republican National Conventions
DISTRIBUTING DELEGATES
After the parties have “distributed” its delegates to each state, the next step in the nomination
process is when each state decides what method they are going to use to decide which
candidate will receive the delegates from their state.
There are two basic methods used by the states to “distribute” the delegates they have been
assigned. Those two methods are: 1) The Primary Election and, 2) The Presidential Caucus.
Technically, it is the state legislature
of each state that decide which
method to use. In many states the
real decision is made by the parties
in that state. (ie. Some states let each party use a
different method)
Delegate Distribution Contest By Type
For The 2008 Presidential Election
(Fifty States & District of Columbia)
ELECTION
CAUCUS, 10, 20%
CAUCUS
BOTH
The graph to the right shows you
how many states use each of the
ELECTION, 37,
72%
different methods. Notice that four
states use both methods. Which
means one party uses the primary election and one party uses the caucus.
BOTH, 4, 8%
A PRIMARY ELECTION works very simply. An individual goes to his/her polling location an
requests the ballot of one of the parties holding a primary in his/her state. He/she takes the
ballot into a private booth, fills out the ballot and places the completed ballot into the
ballot box. This process is almost exactly what most people think of when we think of VOTING.
The simplicity of this process makes it the prominent method used in the Presidential Primary
process. In the 2008 Presidential Election 37 of the 51 state/District, or 72%, primary contests
were conducted in this way.
There are three (3) major types of primaries used in the United States, with the major difference
being how are TRULY INDEPENDENT voters treated. The three (3) major types of primaries are:
1) Closed
2) Open
3) Modified-Open
Voters of a state can register
as a member of a particular
Party (i.e. Republican or Democrat), or
Not affiliated with any party.
If they choose a party to be a
Member of, that is the only
Party’s primary that they can
Vote in.
If they choose not to be
Affiliated with any party they
Are not able to vote at all.
This method prevents
CROSS-OVER voting.
This Method leaves TRULY
INDEPENDENT voters out of
The NOMINATION PROCESS
When voters register in
an OPEN STATE PRIMARY,
like the State of Missouri
you are NOT required to
claim a party. As you can
see from the form to the
left there is no place on
the application that asks
for a party choice or
affiliation.
In an OPEN PRIMARY STATE each voter is asked which party
ballot that they want. This allows Democrats to “cross-over”
and vote in the Republican primary, and vise versa. This system
also allows the TRULY INDEPENDENT to take part in the
PRIMARY PROCESS.
Since it is not known if you
are TRULY INDEPENDENT,
those that are TRULY
INDEPENDENT are not
prevented from voting in the
primary.
Voters of a state can register
as a member of a particular
party (i.e. Republican or Democrat), or
not affiliated with any party.
If they choose a party to be a
member of, that is the only
party’s primary that they can
vote in.
If they choose not to be
affiliated with any party they
are asked which party‘s ballot
they would like. They can vote
in any party’s primary
This method allows all voters to vote, even if they are not
registered with a party. It allows the TRULY INDEPENDENT to
vote, while also prevent Demorcats and Republicans from
Engaging in “cross-over” voting.
The word “CAUCUS” simply means a political meeting.
• A presidential caucus is the method of assigning delegates to candidates based on a series
of meetings. Usually, the precinct meeting, county meeting and the state meeting.
• Is the second method (primary being the first) used to distribute delegates in a state.
• As previous slides have shown this is an uncommon way of distributing delegates.
• It is used so infrequently because it is time consuming and difficult, as the below linked
videos should demonstrate.
• For those reasons, it tends to be dominated by citizens that are highly partisan and tends to
favor more partisan candidates.
To further understand how the caucus process works I have provided you with links to
several externally produced videos relating to this topic. You will find those links below:
Why Tuesday – Attempts to show how the Caucus System works in Iowa
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NxZYwcoBPhA&feature=related
theREALnews – Attempts to show the complexity of the Caucus system in Iowa
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cnh-136QqO8
theREALnews – Attempts to show the complexity of the Caucus system in Texas
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6HfDRrmO8k&feature=related
The Republican Party tends to identify its party nominee much sooner than the Democratic
Party. That is for one basic reason:
The Republican Party ,in most states use the “winner-take-all” method of assigning
convention delegatesand the Democratic Party uses the “proportional” method of assigning
convention delegates.
For Example:
The state of Missouri had 88 Democratic delegates in 2008 and the Republicans had 58 delegates .
In the Missouri Presidential Primary Elections held Tuesday February 5, 2008:
Barack Obama received 49% of the Democratic vote
Hillary Clinton received 47% of the Democratic vote
At the Democratic National Convention each candidate got about the same number of
delegates (36 each) with the other 12 going to John Edwards who finished third.
John McCain received 32% of the Republican vote
Mike Huckabee received 31% of the Republican Vote
Mitt Romney received 29% of the Republican vote
At the Republican National Convention John McCain received 58 or all of the delegates.
In every presidential election since 1832 the two major parties have used the National
Nominating Convention as the “official” method used to nominate their party’s presidential
candidate.
It is this convention that the delegates selected from each state attend to cast their state’s
vote for whom they believe should be the nominee of their party.
Every four years each party chooses a city to host the convention. Follow this link for a
complete of host cities for all of the major party conventions since 1832.
The “real purpose” of the national convention has changed over the years.
Originally, it was where the delegates came to debate and argue their way to selecting their
party’s nominee. Many times there were numerous votes taken before the party could agree
on their party’s nominee.
Today, the national convention has become the time when the party “officially” announces
their nominee. This is because the fifty-state nominating contests (primary or caucus) has
already determined which candidate will have a majority of the delegate votes before the
convention is held.
The convention is also used as a time to work together to develop the PARTY PLATFORM.